hammer away 的 3 个定义
- a tool consisting of a solid head, usually of metal, set crosswise on a handle, used for beating metals, driving nails, etc.
- any of various instruments or devices resembling this in form, action, or use, as a gavel, a mallet for playing the xylophone, or a lever that strikes the bell in a doorbell.
- Firearms. the part of a lock that by its fall or action causes the discharge, as by exploding the percussion cap or striking the primer or firing pin; the cock.
- (6)
- to beat or drive with a hammer.
- to fasten by using hammer and nails; nail: We spent the day hammering up announcements on fences and trees.
- to assemble or build with a hammer and nails: He hammered together a small crate.
- (11)
- to strike blows with or as if with a hammer.
- to make persistent or laborious attempts to finish or perfect something: He hammered away at his speech for days.
- to reiterate; emphasize by repetition: The teacher hammered away at the multiplication tables.
hammer away 近义词
work hard at
由hammer away构成的短语
- hammer and tongs
- hammer away at
- hammer out
- under the hammer
更多hammer away例句
- A pick hammer sits at the top of the handle to allow users to break ice with a tapping motion, while the spike at the bottom offers more traditional stabbing functionality.
- Complete your set with a cutting mat, metal rulers and squares, some sponges, and a rubber or wooden hammer—any other type of hammer can damage the leather.
- The group, often armed with guns and other weapons such as hammers and baseball bats, regularly rallies on the grounds of the Minnesota Capitol.
- There were rules and if someone was acting up in the chat you dropped the hammer.
- Papagelis joined forces in Hammer’s Lot with Ken Johnson — “Pinto Ron” — in 1992.
- Next, the GOP should hammer away at how our roads, bridges, and tunnels are crumbling, and push for an infrastructure initiative.
- If we enter with hammer in hand, we may leave with merely dust and rubble on our faces.
- In this way, certain cognitive mechanisms can act like a hammer too eager for nails.
- The phrase means, “the nail that sticks out always gets hit by a hammer.”
- Another surveillance video, showing the perpetrator with hammer in hand, is here.
- The noise of the hammer is always in his ears, and his eye is upon the pattern of the vessel he maketh.
- With a hammer the boy knocked off some of the slats of the small box in which Squinty had made his journey.
- I suppose the hammer falls back more slowly from the string, and that makes the tone sing longer.
- He was ready to drop when he reached it, and his heart beat like a hammer against his ribs.
- And then the Monitor's deafening hammer sounded again, and after that, silence.